Kurt Warner has a new reality program on the USA Network called “The Moment,” and while the former quarterback is handling media interviews to promote the show, he can’t escape reliving a most frustrating moment from his best playing days.

Since the loss of Warner’s St. Louis Rams in Super Bowl XXXVI, the team that beat them, the New England Patriots, have been implicated in “Spygate”—allegations of them videotaping opponents’ game preparations, including the Rams’ walkthrough practice leading up to that contest.

Kurt Warner says the Patriots outplayed the Rams in Super Bowl XXXVI, but he can't help but wonder whether they had an unfair advantage. (AP Photo)

“I don't look at it as tainted at all—that's not the perspective that I choose to take,” Warner told 411mania’s Al Norton. “But with that being said, I will say that I don't know how you can't wonder, how you can't wonder if something did happen, if there was an advantage. I simply say that because to know that there was evidence out there, that there were tapes out there, but no one ever got to see the tapes—the commissioner or whoever decided they were going to destroy them from what I understand—and so it continually leaves the question.”

For Warner, the MVP of the Rams’ Super Bowl XXXIV win over the Tennessee Titans, he and his teammates fell short of a second ring in three years with the 20-17 loss to the Patriots. It took two teams and seven more years for Warner to get another shot at a championship with the Arizona Cardinals, only to lose another heartbreaker to the Pittsburgh Steelers in Super Bowl XLIII. Warner also wondered if the trajectory of his time in the NFL was veered off course by the near miss against New England.

“Being that it was a part of the history of our game and it was directly part of my history, part of the history of my organization and my teammates, and possibly could have affected my career long term, you have a question: Did something go on? But I don't allow that to taint or affect the way I look at it.”

That said, Warner made it clear to 411mania.com that from his perspective, the Rams still lost fair and square.

“The Patriots beat us in that game—they outplayed us, they deserved to win—but it's hard to just let it go by saying, ‘Oh, I don't know if anything happened.’ I still have a question on what exactly when down in that whole time period; did they get some kind of advantage? Maybe it wasn't in our game, but did they get some kind of advantage in any game?

“I think it's unfortunate for us and the people involved and for the people that are football fans that we have to even wonder, ‘What if?’ But I'm not going to take that credit away from them and those players because I have really no idea what happened, if anything. I'm not going to automatically chalk it up as they cheated or they did do something or did have something because I don't know. It's unfortunate that I have to sit back and other players and fans have to sit back and wonder if.”

"Am I over the loss? Yeah, I'm over the loss," Faulk told Tom Curran of CSNNE.com. “But I'll never be over being cheated out of the Super Bowl.

“That's a different story. I can understand losing a Super Bowl, that's fine. But how things happened and what took place … Obviously, the commissioner gets to handle things how he wants to handle them, but if they wanted us to shut up about what happened, show us the tapes. Don't burn 'em."

While commissioner Roger Goodell decided to burn videotapes the Patriots made of opponents’ defensive signals in ’06 and ’07, he punished coach Bill Belichick and the organization with a fine and a lost first-round draft pick. Goodell, however, followed up to say there was no evidence of the Patriots doing something similar before Super Bowl XXXVI.

Faulk didn’t mince words in telling Curran that the Patriots seemed too prepared to handle what the Rams’ high-powered offense, especially on red-zone plays they had never shown in previous games.

Warner was more diplomatic about happened, but it’s clear the events in the game are still fresh in the minds of the Rams.